Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 35
Jeff and Dave discuss a Facebook dating app, Twitter selling data to Cambridge Analytica, and more.
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Jeff and Dave discuss a Facebook dating app, Twitter selling data to Cambridge Analytica, and more.
Fake airline giveaways won’t win you a ticket, but they might steal your data.
On this episode of the podcast, Jeff and David discuss personal data being sold on Facebook, cops trying to unlock an iPhone with a dead man’s finger, bad passwords, and more.
Rumor has it that typing “BFF” as a Facebook comment checks your profile security. We investigate the claim.
On this podcast, special guest David Emm joins David to talk data privacy, AI, and smart homes
On this week’s podcast, Jeff and David discuss Facebook fallout, Amazon’s “voice-sniffing” patent, and a paid version of Google.
Jeff and Dave discuss the latest changes at Facebook, a data breach at Panera Bread, the fallout from the ransomware in Atlanta, and more.
Jeff and Dave discuss deleting Facebook accounts, Earth not being flat, new cryptocurrency, and more.
In this podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss the Facebook and Cambridge Analytica debacle, hackers making bomb threats, and more.
If someone offers cryptocurrency for nothing, remember the only free cheese is in a mousetrap. Here’s what’s really going on.
In this week’s edition Kaspersky Lab’s Transatlantic Cable podcast, Dave and Jeff discuss a North Carolina county victimized by ransomware, Apple Face ID, and more.
Facebook sends so many notifications that sometimes it’s tempting just to turn them off. We tell you how to do it — or how to adjust them so they don’t take over your life.
Attackers pretending to be acquaintances asking for money — the story is old, the approaches new. We show you how to avoid the e-bait.
Want to protect your intimate photos from ever going public? Facebook has a suggestion: Upload them yourself!
The real scale of the Yahoo breach (spoiler: 3 billion), Facebook’s own Face ID, UK Lottery DDoS, and more.
A story about a large malicious campaign carried out in Facebook Messenger — and how it worked.
Last week, I was chatting with a colleague when our conversation shifted to how much she loves the “On this Day” update from Facebook, which lets her revisit memories from
Facebook’s settings are a moving target. Over the past few years, the company has changed various settings several times, adding, moving, even removing options. Now it’s really easy to get
So, you created a Facebook account, probably more than a few years ago. And maybe you even set it up well, checking through all of the available privacy and security
Do you like privacy? Well, let me introduce you to a new player in the encrypted messaging game: Secret Conversations. It comes from a messaging service many are already using, Facebook